Indiana Leader Pushes for More High-paying Jobs

House Minority Leader Scott Pelath says Indiana isn’t doing enough to ensure that jobs being created in the state are high-paying ones.

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Hear Brandon Smith's story about Scott Pelath pushing for more high-paying jobs in Indiana.

A recent study from the Indiana Institute for Working Families says Indiana has the highest percent growth of what it calls “low-wage” jobs of any of its neighboring states. Low wage jobs are those whose median annual salary is below the federal poverty level, about $23,000 a year for a family of four.

The number of low-wage jobs increased by about 12 percent in 2012, the most recent year examined by the study. 27 percent of all jobs in the state can be considered low-wage.

House Minority Leader Scott Pelath says that’s because Republican leaders in the legislature and the governor’s office have focused too much on helping big business, rather than the middle-class.

“We have added jobs here in recent months but they are jobs that are worse than the jobs that that people used to have," says Pelath. What matters is not numbers, it’s whether people perceive if they’re prospering or not; whether they think their lives are getting better.”

“You try and increase the skill set so your existing workforce can compete for higher wage jobs, help your student population get the skill set necessary for the more advanced jobs of today, Hershman says, "and you try and get more people employed because it helps push wage rates up.”

Pelath says reducing Indiana’s income gap won’t happen overnight but, like Hershman, noted that improving the readiness of the state’s workforce is a critical task.